Let's talk Credit Cards. The wife and I have room for improvement in getting our money to work better for us.
All current CC debt is paid off. We have IRA's, my wifes 401, my military TSP, a quickly accessible money market account, a house we bought in 2005 and are just now back to even, 2 cars that we own, and my guaranteed retirement.
I will probably be retired from the Navy as a LCDR on 01July2020... and then I'll have to grow up and get a real job. She's a nurse and works about 15hrs/week now increasing to 30hrs/wk in Sept. We're bringing in plenty of money, just need to be smarter in general about it.

Our current USAA credit cards are nothing special and we usually spend our rewards points at Christmas time... I think we get 1% points.
We are putting my wife on my CC since it's been open longer and are going to cancel hers... and open up a new CC or two that makes more sense and works for us.

I've been researching cards for a few days think I'm gonna get both of these.
AMEX Blue Cash Preferred... 6% cash back on groceries and 3% cash back on gas
Citi Double Cash Card... 1% on all purchases, 1% when you pay... basically 2% on everything

We've got the discipline to manage it, and plan to put everything on CC's and pay off each month... maximize points... kinda seems like free money, or getting a small "sale price" on everything pending how you look at it.

My wife and I each have personal cards from pre-marriage. We also have a joint Chase Freedom (1% all the time + %5 on quarterly categories)
I also have an Amazon card which is 3% on all amazon purchases, 1% everything else(I think, I only use it on amazon).
We are talking about adding the new Costco Visa when it rolls out. Its 1% everything, 2% Costco, 3% restaurants/travel, 4% gas. Seems pretty good.

Joint savings, joint checking, each have a 401k and both have indiviual checking and savings accounts. Most of this is automated transfers after paychecks deposit into our individual accounts.
Plenty of money in the joint savings stream for house repairs, appliances and vacations. Current retirement plans are totally separate.
It seems second nature "managing" all this now. I don't find any hassle with it. But I am getting pressure to simplify and combine/downsize.

Numerous Costco trips canceled after we got there without a debit card. Neither of us carries one. Everything goes on credit, and for the most part gets paid off twice/month on paydays.

If I remember correctly, you should be able to get 1.5% with your USAA card. One nice thing, which most active duty folks don't know is that as a result of the Servicemembers's Civil Relief Act, most credit card companies will waive all annual fees for military. This opens up some more options that usually don't really makes sense, but can if you don't have to pay for it. For example, I know that American Express will waive the $500 yearly fee for an AMEX Platinum and I've heard that Master Card will waive the $1000 yearly fee for the Gold Card as well as the lower fees for a black or titanium. I know the Gold Card comes with $200 of free travel dollars and 2% cash back on everything. Not the greatest perks, but but it's a pretty cool package. Other than those, the two cards you mention are some of the most highly regarded with the addition of the Chase Sapphire if you prefer travel rewards to cash back. Nerdwallet.com is the goto for comparisons.

It's funny how some people seem to go into a panic when I mention charging everything on a credit card. No point in paying for it now when you can pay for it in a month and get some rewards off of it (as long as you're not stupid with it).

I've got the same Amazon card as doward I use on all my Amazon purchases for 3% cash back and everything else goes to my BOA Cash Rewards for 2% on groceries, 3% on gas, and 1% on everything else. It's amazing how quick you can run up a couple $100 in rewards even with a pretty modest income level.

I used to use chase and discover cards with the 5% quarter rotating bonus category but I get too lazy to keep up with which to use with gas and which to use with groceries month after month. I now juts put everything on my bofa cash rewards card and amazon purchases on their store card which is 5% back.

I'm also eyeing that new costco citi visa card to become my new go to credit card for most purchases.

How did I miss the Amazon option... gotta homework that now. I'd also considered the Costco card, but we do most of our groceries at the Commissary. I live on base and can see the commissary from my front-yard, so the Costco card might not be the best option. But it looks pretty tight for somebody needing to feed a couple teenage boys in bulk or whatever. I don't think I want more than 3 cards, and we need to keep our current USAA one for the history... maybe put our quarterly car insurance payment on it to keep it from getting dusty.

I do Fidelity Amex (supposedly it's switching to a visa this year) for general use. 2% cash back on everything, it has to go to a fidelity cash account but electronic transfers to your bank are free. Chase freedom and discover for rotating 5% categories. 3% Amazon card. Amex blue for 3% at grocery stores. 5% at target with red card. Penfed has a 5% gas card.

We use a Chase card (2% cashback?), but they're all pretty similar these days. One other tip: check out local credit unions for great rates on everything from IRAs to checking to savings. I put my IRA in this year, and they were paying nearly triple what the banks could do.

My now ex-wife and I used to have the Chase Freedom with rotating 5% categories; Discover with rotating 5% categories, and the Costco AmEx card. With that system we'd easily get $500+ per year in free cash rewards.

Now I have the Discover It card (same program as before) and an AmEx Gold cash card... decided to try out the points thing. Going to pick up the Costco card when it becomes available though and stop there.

My AmEx Gold rewards cash card was advertised as being an "even better" offer than the Blue Cash card. I'm always wary of cards that offer 'points' rather than simple cash back, but I thought I'd give it a shot.

When redeeming for cash, it's poorer than the cash back percentage offers. One point is only worth .006 cents. So for each dollar you spend, you get .006 cents back, making it an order of magnitude poorer in return than even a 1% cash back return card.

Even when redeeming for gift cards, the highest value I've seen is .0085 cents per point, when redeeming for iTunes gift cards, or Best Western. I currently have a reservation for Best Western in San Diego next month, so I know where I'm spending my rewards bonus!

That being said, I got 50,000 points just for signing up. So a $300 cash back bonus isn't bad. I'll probably hang on to the card til the new Costco one comes out, but dump it or use it much much less after that.

I thought that closing an account showed up as negative on a credit report? Is that not true?

Years ago I was thinking a financing a motorcycle. They told me my revolving credit line was too high. That I needed to close an account to qualify. So I did. That's the way I remember it anyhow.

Fast forward to 3 years ago when I financed my RV. They said something about having a closed account and that not looking good. It wasn't enough to stop them from financing me, but I had no idea closing that account years earlier was a bad idea.

It's best to leave an account open for a while after paying it off before closing it, so that'd be my plan. Average account life affects your credit score, so if all your accounts are only a year or two old it brings your score down, and I suppose they must still consider closed accounts in the 'average' calculation because closing them hurts you there.

That being said, it's not a huge deal in my experience. I have had several accounts opened and closed and I still have an excellent credit score.

One of my friends just convinced me to get a Chase Sapphire card. They're currently doing a 50,000 bonus points offer, which is $500 cash or $625 when redeemed for travel. Even without the bonus offer, the rewards and benefits are as good or better than most rewards cards out there.

I'm always wary of cards that offer 'points' rather than simple cash back, but I thought I'd give it a shot.

When redeeming for cash, it's poorer than the cash back percentage offers.

That's been my experience too. I use to put everything on a Capital One card that used points. The point system pretty much worked out to 1%, a point was worth a penny. Then they rolled out there "DOUBLE THE POINTS!" crap. Shortly thereafter I logged on to cash out the 25k point $250 gift card I'd been working towards and it was now listed at 50k points, ahh hosed. I cashed out what I could and moved all my charges to a cash reward card so at least I know what my rewards are actually worth.

Holy shizzle... have learned a lot. Biggest lesson... you actually have to read pretty in depth into the "terms and conditions" to know what you're buying. For example... gas stations attached to other stores (Costco, Walmart, etc...) don't count. Also, Target isn't a "department store" nor a "grocery store", so I'm not sure if anything there gets me point... lots of gotcha's. Typically, for "TRAVEL", like airline tickets and rental cars, you must book directly with the vendor... no Orbitz or Expedia. I've tried to break it down based on the (now) 3 cards I'm thinking about getting, plus what to use them for IN BOLD. This is in addition to keeping my lame USAA card that I've had for 15 years that will get quarterly usage for insurance payments.

Each card also has other bonus stuff, like automatic rental car insurance when you use the card to rent a car... other stuff like that. So far however, I haven't found a website that really breaks it down what you're getting with each card. There are some "comparo" websites, but they all look like scams. http://www.wsj.com/articles/credit-c...ire-1408732727

Strikeouts because I won't use that card for that stuff... why use the Amazon for gas at 2% when the AMEX gets me 3%. I'm thinking that the whole idea here is to basically get a sale price on everything... 1% of my gas bill over the course of a year might only be $30, but it's something. The wife and I will generate a list of the places we shop and what we buy... each card will be used for specific things. The Amazon card will only be used on Amazon. I just looked, and we spent $6k there last year. Normally, we use our debit card on Amazon... whammy, I just picked up a 3% sale on everything I buy there. And because of that, we'll probably spend more there this year... the shipping gets faster all the time, and they literally now have everything.

We like to travel so we get the card for the airline we use (Virgin America--soon to vanish into the Alaskan wild?). Most bills go on that so at least one of us or more can fly x-country for free when we go. They do have an annual fee but it eliminates the checked luggage fees which pays for itself in one trip for one person.

We also have the Chase Freedom with categories, mostly for amazon 5% (it does double to 10% sometimes) around the holidays. An amazon card would also work since we buy ALL THE THINGS on amazon.

We also have a Target card to get 5% and free shipping (when lazy) every time.